Further Expansion by Healthcare 21Cork-headquartered Healthcare 21 Group (HC21), one of Europe’s leading healthcare specialist sales, marketing and solutions providers, has strengthened its UK operations with the acquisition of Cardio Solutions (UK) Ltd. The acquisition...

215,207 people are now employed in companies supported by Enterprise Ireland, growing at 4.4% in 2018. This is the highest total employment in the 20-year history of the agency. Almost two thirds (61%) of the new jobs created were outside of Dublin with all regions recording increases in employment. 64% of total employment by Enterprise Ireland backed companies is now outside of Dublin.

Lifesciences (+8%), Construction (+8%), Electronics (+7%), Primary Meats (+5%) and Food (+3%) were the key performing sectors. The jobs growth translates into a net increase of 9,118 total jobs created in 2018.

Minister for Business, Enterprise & Innovation Heather Humphreys said “These record results are a great achievement and a testament to the resilience of Irish companies in the context of Brexit. They are particularly welcome in the context of similarly strong results from IDA-supported companies in 2018. I am especially pleased that 61% of the jobs created were from regionally-based companies and to see that there were increases in every region. In addition to providing employment, these State-backed companies make a significant contribution to the economy and spent €26.8 billion in 2017.”

The Minister added “As we reach full employment, our focus must shift from getting people back to work to creating sustainable jobs that can deal with new challenges and embrace new technologies. The Government’s new Future Jobs plan, which I will launch next month, will guide the next phase of Ireland’s economic development and embed the excellent progress we have made since the economic downturn.”

Julie Sinnamon, CEO, Enterprise Ireland, said: “2018 was another strong year for job creation with our client companies now employing 215,207 people across Ireland and creating over 18,800 new jobs. Now at the half way mark into our four-year strategy to Build Scale and Expand Reach 2017-2020, we are on course to exceed the ambitious target of creating 60,000 new jobs by the end of 2020.

“The results suggest that we have yet to see a significant impact of Brexit on Irish companies. However, as the March 29 deadline approaches, and uncertainty continues, we would anticipate that 2019 will be a challenging period for some Irish exporters. Ongoing doubt about the outcome of the Brexit negotiations, currency volatility, transition arrangements, customs/logistics and potential delays in investment activity are key concerns for exporters.

“While 85% of our clients have taken Brexit actions, our continuous efforts to support our clients to innovate, diversify and compete will ramp up so that Irish businesses are equipped to mitigate against the fallout of Brexit and build on the strength of the 2018 results.”

Enterprise Ireland said that it is working intensively on a one-to-one basis with its exporting clients on Brexit contingency plans. In 2018, the agency approved funding of €74m for 535 of its most Brexit-exposed clients.

As part of Enterprise Ireland’s Brexit response, the organisation is announcing a major drive to support Irish exporter diversification including a significant expansion to its overseas offices network* in 14 priority markets over the next 18 months to help companies expand beyond the UK including:

Increased staff resources in markets where Enterprise Ireland already has a presence including Italy, Hungary, Brazil and the USA

Increased staff resources in new markets including China, Scotland and New Zealand

This increased presence abroad will build on Enterprise Ireland’s work in 2018 when it helped Irish companies win 1,504 new contracts, open 402 new offices overseas and it brought 1,023 international buyers to Ireland.

Julie Sinnamon concluded: “With Brexit fast approaching, consolidating exports to the UK while expanding the Irish export footprint in global markets is a key priority for Enterprise Ireland. We are continuing our diversification strategy to reduce our dependency on the UK (exports to the UK have dropped from 44% in 2007 to 34% in 2017), while we plan to strengthen our overseas presence.

“For 2019 our top five key strategic priorities are supporting clients to prepare for a hard Brexit, regional jobs development and driving innovation, competitiveness and diversification among Irish exporters.”

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Further Expansion by Healthcare 21Cork-headquartered Healthcare 21 Group (HC21), one of Europe’s leading healthcare specialist sales, marketing and solutions providers, has strengthened its UK operations with the acquisition of Cardio Solutions (UK) Ltd. The acquisition...